Henry Osmaston (to King's Mead
in 1931) Insatiable, eclectic curiosity: Osmaston, right in 1999 with a Tibetan refugee nomad at Kiagar Tsho, at some 4400m in Rupshu, Ladakh |
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Henry Osmaston was a forester,
geographer, dairy former and mountaineer who published
well over a hundred academic papers during the course of
a long and hugely varied career. His earliest childhood
memories were of riding elephants amongst the Indian
foothills of tine Himalaya; one of his last field
projects, aged 80, was a hydrological survey of the hill
tarns of the English Lake District; his proudest sporting
achievement was to organise and participate in the 1958
Uganda Ski Championships on the Mountains of the Moon. Forestry and a love of wild mountain country were his genetic inheritance. He was born in 1922 in the Himalayan hill station of Dehra Dun, where his father, Arthur Osmaston, was an officer in the Indian Forest Service; in his spare time Arthur wrote the first account of the birds of Garwhal and made a collection of 1,500 botanical species, including two new discoveries named osmastonii. Two of Henry's uncles also worked in the Forest Service; a cousin, Gordon Osmaston, was Director of the Indian Military Survey and made several exploratory expeditions with Tenzing Norgay, the Tibetan mountaineer who "' would later achieve fame on Everest. Like most boys in his position, at eight years old Henry was sent home to an English prep school, before going on to Eton, where he enjoyed fishing in the Fellows' Pond and bird-watching at Slough sewage farm. During his first term at Worcester College, Oxford, in 1940, his interest in natural history prompted him to switch from Chemistry to Forestry, but those studies had soon to be combined with an intensive electronics course, as Oxford was interrupted by wartime service. He was commissioned into the Royal Electrical and
Mechanical Engineers, starting In l943 with a years
anti-aircraft duty in Suffolk, followed by four years in
the Middle East. It was only in 1947 that he was demobbed
with the rank of major and returned to Oxford to complete
his Forestry degree. Soon after his return he met Anna
Weir, who was working at the Bodleian Library. They
married at the end of 1948 and in January 1949 Henry left
to join the Uganda forestry service, followed a few weeks
later by his bride. I had clear professional aims and sufficient independence in put them into practice. My colleagues, both British and African, were congenial and mostly were highly motivated. My family enjoyed life there as much as I did. What more could I ask? He also compared his and Anna's rough simple life in Uganda to the pampered existence of the modern aid official, insulated inside his luxury hotel. And he became exasperated by the revisionist tendency of some modern commentators to denounce automatically the motives of former colonial officials. Under the Protectorate there was infect an explicit aim of ultimate self-government; as Osmaston put it, "It had been established from the beginning that the interests of tide inhabitants were paramount." In the specific area of forestry, by 1960 all the major areas of natural forests were protected for water catchment or timber production; further softwood plantations were created to cater for increased demand. In their spare time the Osmastons explored the wonderfully varied landscape of Uganda, in particular its mountains. On their first Easter leave they attempted the first ascent of a monolithic granite inselberg called Amiel. Henry almost trod on a puff adder, just as a rapidly approaching thunderstorm ended their attempt well short of the summit. They consoled themselves by naming their first daughter Amiel and in 1958 Henry finally returned to complete the first ascent- with Andrew Stuart, who managed the rock climb despite being stung by a scorpion. Perhaps Henrys most satisfying posting was to Toro, close to the Ruwenzori or "Mountains of the Moon", on the Uganda-Congo border. These glaciated peaks rise to over 5,000 metres, but their lower slopes are cloaked with a profuse tangle of vegetation, rich in endemic species, both botanical and zoological. Here Henry and Anna shared many treks and climbs, on one occasion being woken by a leopard entering their tent in the middle of the night (on another occasion Henry, alone in the bush, was very lucky to survive a buffalo attack). It was on that same 1949 trip that Anna ; discovered an old Huntley & Palmer biscuit tin in a cave and, on opening it, found inside the skull of a local Bakonzo tribesman, who had died of altitude sickness on an earlier expedition. Anna promptly developed a fever and had to be evacuated from the mountain, trussed. up in a blanket slung from a pole. In 1952 Henry Osmaston took part in an Anglo-Belgian scientific expedition to the Ruwenzori - the biggest since Alexander Wollaston's and the Duke of Abruzzi's pioneering ventures of 1906. It was whilst building the Elena Hut in 1951, hi preparation for the expedition, that Osmaston with Richard McConnell did the first recorded skiing on the then large snowy expanse of the Stanley Plateau; the first formal "championship" followed in 1958. Osmaston's Ugandan tour came to an end in 1963, soon after Independence. Reflecting 40 years later on the handover of power, he regretted that hjs British peers had not foreseen the speed and suddenness of independence; he also felt that they had not coped successfully with the traditional dominance of the kingdom of Buganda. However, he felt generally proud of his achievements and from a distance watched in horror as one of the most stable, self-sufficient, well-governed countries in Africa was torn apart, first by Milton Obote, then by Idi Amin and then again by Obote, Back in Britain, Henry Osmaston reinvented himself as a lecturer in Geography - a subject suited perfectly to his insatiable, eclectic curiosity. His entree to academia was a DPhil thesis at Oxford, analysing past climate and vegetation changes from pollen samples in mud cores bored from the fathomless bogs of the Ruwenzori. His supervisor said it was the best DPhil he had ever read and Bristol University offered Osmaston a job in its Geography department, where he remained a lecturer until his retirement in 1988. As a geographer he had two paramount qualities. One was his love of real, physical, hands-on fieldwork, preferably in mountain environments; the other was the astonishing breadth of his interests, all backed up by copious, meticulous research. A chance conversation with a colleague, John Crook,
during a tedious departmental committee meeting, led to
his being invited on Crook's 1980 Indian-British study of
life in Zanskar, the inner kingdom of the northern
Kashmir province of Ladakh, known traditionally as
"Little Tibet". As Osmaston combined geography
lecturing with running a dairy farm at Winford, near
Bristol, he was invited to Zanskar as "farming
expert". And to Zanskar he kept returning often with
teams of students, making comprehensive studies of
traditional Tibetan-style agriculture but also climbing
peaks to embrace his geomorphological interests.Tbis work
culminated in l994 with his publication, with John Crook,
of the 1,029-page-long Himalayan Buddhist Villages;
environment, resources, society and religious life in
Zangskar, Ladakh. I met Henry Osmaston in 1985 when he joined our Alpine
Club Indian-British expedition to explore the Rimo
mountains in northern Ladakh. Henry could not fly out
with the main party because he was still supervising
exams in Bristol, and from Leh I had to send a telegram
announcing that, alas, he would not be able to join us:
our mountains rose off a tributary of the Siachen
Glacier, where Indian and Pakistani artillery were busily
shelling each other on the world's highest battlefield.
The Indian authorities were adamant that no one outside
the main, escorted party could enter the war zone. Henry ignored the telegram and, armed with a letter of
introduction from Cousin Gordon (the former military
survey director) and a sheaf of US satellite photos (much
coveted in those days of strained Indian-US relations) he
bluffed, cajoled and charmed his way up through Kashmir,
over the world's highest road pass, the Kardung La, into
. the restricted Niibra valley, on to the Siachen
Glacier, and then up the tributary Rimo glacier,
surviving on an emergency supply of biscuits and Anna's
home-made marmalade. I was returning from an unsuccessful attempt on the
summit of Rimo I one evening, walking across the glacier
to-wards base camp when l stumbled across a traditional
wood-shafted ice axe, labelled H. Osmaston, lying on the
ice. A few moments later 1 met a tousled, grey-bearded
gentleman, with battered spectacles held together by
Araldite, who greeted me, "Hello Stephen, do you
happen to have seen an ice axe anywhere? I seem to have
mislaid mine." A few days later, on the way home, passing the main
army base after nightfall, fearful of being mistaken for
a Pakistani spy, he tied a white handkerchief to the same
ice axe, held it aloft and sang loud warning songs as he
came down from the glacier. Two-years later, in 1987, he was with us again. this time on Mt Shishapangma in Tibet, supervising some of his Bristol students. A fierce October storm swept through the Himalaya, killing many people. We were all spared, but Henry and two students, were caught out by the,, blizzard; shivering all night besides a boulder, half buried in a snowstorm (not the first time his students had suffered unplanned benightment on a field trip). After hours of shivering Henry was immensely relieved to see a brief glimmer of sunshine as his 65th birthday dawned and later that morning he and his students staggered into base camp. The storm seriously thwarted his researches and such rock and snow samples as he and his team had managed to secure were confiscated later by intransigent Chinese officials, who seemed determined to get our expedition out of Tibet as quickly as possible, in the wake of the recent brutally crushed uprising in Lhasa. Retirement from official duties in 1988 simply allowed Osmaston to work harder on his prodigious enthusiasms. In 1992 he and Anna sold the farm at Winford, and moved to Finsthwaite, near Lake Windermere, whence scientific papers continued to pour forth, even after his 80th birthday. Prominent among them were his 2002 paper with George Kaser on the drastic dwindling of tropical glaciers and his 2005 paper on the "Quaternary Glaciation of the Bale Mountains, Ethiopia", based on a recent field trip. In 1996 he returned to Uganda as keynote speaker for a
conference on the Ruwenzori mountains. Typically, he made
the effort to track down in Kampala the woman who had
helped look after his children 40 years earlier; and in
the Ruwenzori be re-established contact with the Eakonzo
people who had portered for his mountain expeditions.
Despite the terrible problems of overpopulation, he was
encouraged to see the country revitalised, 10 years after
the end of Obote's murderous reign, and gratified to see
some of his own forestry conservation measures still in
place. His last great project, completed just two weeks before he died, was a comprehensive revision of the definitive guidebook, Guide to the Ruwemori: the Mountains of the Moon, which he first published with David Pasteur in 1972. Both the book and the manner in which it was compiled were typical of the man. Although ostensibly a climbing guide, it is actually packed with fascinating information on the history, mythology, zoology, botany and glaciology of the region, reflecting Osmaston's abundant enthusiasms. The recent, drastic acceleration of glacial melting is recorded meticulously and a wealth of new colour photos have been added to the original monochrome collection. Assembling all this new material, as with all his other publications, Henry Osmaston was tireless (and, when you were trying to cook supper, sometimes tiresome) in badgering climbers, photographers, explorers and scientists all over the world ,by telephone, by post and by e-mail. His global network of friends and colleagues was as huge and varied as his range of interests. He loved life and pursued his interests right to the end, still as fascinated by the world as he had been as a child, when he asked his mahout to get the elephant he was riding to pick him interesting flowers and fruits. Stephen Venables Henry Osmaston, forester, geographer and mountaineer;
born Dehra Dun, India 20 October 1922; Senior assistant
Conservator of Forests, Ugandan Forestry Department,
1949-63; Senior Lecturer in Geography, Bristol University
l965-88, Honorary Research Fellow 1988-2006; Research
As-sociate, Irtternational Development Centre, Oxford
University 1990-94; married Anna Weir (one son, three
daughters);died Finsthwaite, Cumbria 27 June 2006 |
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